The golden trout is a California species that was introduced in Montana in 1907. There are currently about 20 golden trout populations in the high mountain lakes of western and southcentral Montana. They provide a unique opportunity to catch a beautiful fish in a pristine environment. Golden trout up to 4 pounds have been caught in Montana but typical size is usually 6-12 inches. Golden trout are spring spawners and can usually be found in inlet or outlet streams to high mountain lakes around the Fourth of July. Like other mountain lake trout species, they are opportunistic feeders, surviving off a variety of aquatic and terrestrial invertebrates.

(Observations spanning multiple months or years are excluded from time charts)

Migration

Migrates from lakes into tributary streams to spawn.

Habitat

Found only in mountain lakes in Montana; also successful in clear, cool lakes at lower elevations . Spawns in redds over clean gravel of fist size and smaller. Spawns mostly in outlets, but also in inlets and occasionally along lake shoals.

Food Habits

Aquatic insects are most important, but other aquatic insects and terrestrial insects are important ant times. May feed at benthos, in water column, or at surface. Zooplankton rarely taken.

Ecology

Readily hybridizes with cutthroat and rainbow. Demise of former 50+ populations of golden trout largely due to introduction of other spring spawning species, whether by hybridization or replacement.

Reproductive Characteristics

Spawns June-July at ice-out at water temperatures of 44-58 degrees F. Sexually mature: usually 3-4 years; sometimes 2 years. Incubation: about 46-52 days at temperatures of 46-52 degrees F. Fry emerge in early September.